Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.5  Multiplying Expressions

From the power rules to multiplying monomials and polynomials — understood through an area model.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 4 in this lesson: 7.5.4 The area model

7.5.4 The area model

Everything above becomes obvious once you see it as area. The area of a rectangle is length times width. So a product like (x+2)(x+3) can be drawn as a rectangle whose width is x+2 and whose height is x+3. Cut the width at the x mark and the height at the x mark, and the rectangle falls into four smaller cells — one for each pair of pieces.

Each cell's area is one of the four products, and the total area is their sum — which is exactly the expanded expression. The picture makes "every term times every term" something you can literally point at: there is one cell for x·x, one for x·3, one for 2·x, and one for 2·3.

The big rectangle, area (x+2)(x+3), is the sum of its four cells: x2 + 2x + 3x + 6 = x2 + 5x + 6.

The same picture explains the earlier sections too. A monomial times a polynomial is a rectangle with just one row of cells (one factor has a single term). A monomial times a monomial is a single cell — one rectangle, no cuts. The area model is the one idea underneath all of expression multiplication: break the rectangle into pieces, find each piece, add them up.

Key idea — area is the master plan

Draw the product as a rectangle; cut each side at its plus signs; the cells are the term-by-term products; the total area is the expanded expression. Every product rule in this lesson is just this picture, read off.

🎮 Try it ★The area model for (x + p)(x + q)

Slide the two constants. The rectangle re-cuts into four cells, each labelled with its area. Watch the two middle cells add up as like terms, and the total area become the trinomial x2+(p+q)x+pq.

top edge: x + 2
side edge: x + 3
eastmath.com · 7.5 Multiplying Expressions · 7.5.4 The area model